I did 4 prints Saturday on the new paper. For every print I made on the new paper, I did one with the same exposure time and development time (in the same tray, just after the first) on a sheet of Agfa MCC111 from a package I still have... Two of them were done without a MG filter, one with a soft grade filter (no1) and one with a hard one (no5). All of them were developed in Tetenal Eukobrom 1+9 for 1.5 min @ 24 deg Celcius... They were air dried on screens.
The new paper seems very close to the old one. The most significant differences I see are:
- it seems a little more contrasty, and a little colder.
- the paper base is whiter. (there might be some "yellowing" of the paper base of the old paper, due to its age ????)
Otherwise, the new paper seems to behave just like the old one. The above differences are not BIG, but they are visible to the trained eye...
It seems like a quite lovable MG (VC) paper, on a heavy and bright paper base that does not curl too much after the drying and handles well in the chemicals. I haven't tested its behaviour in toners (I'll soon do that) or in different developers (I need more paper for this...). I just hope it won't have an "ilford MG V" type of behaviour (I mean that it won't tone and it won't differ, whatever bloody soup you use for it...).
I think that Mirko's experiment is a highly succesful one, and hope that it'll meet the commercial success it merits...
Good luck with it, and thank you for letting us be the beta-testers....